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Bridge Disasters in America: The Cause and the Remedy
Bridge Disasters in America: The Cause and the Remedy
Bridge Disasters in America: The Cause and the Remedy
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Bridge Disasters in America: The Cause and the Remedy

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DigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "Bridge Disasters in America: The Cause and the Remedy" by George L. Vose. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format. The books are available in print, as well as ebooks. DigiCat hopes you will treat this work with the acknowledgment and passion it deserves as a classic of world literature.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherDigiCat
Release dateSep 16, 2022
ISBN8596547380566
Bridge Disasters in America: The Cause and the Remedy

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    Bridge Disasters in America - George L. Vose

    George L. Vose

    Bridge Disasters in America: The Cause and the Remedy

    EAN 8596547380566

    DigiCat, 2022

    Contact: DigiCat@okpublishing.info

    Table of Contents

    Cover

    Titlepage

    Text

    AUTHOR OF "MANUAL FOR RAILROAD ENGINEERS AND ENGINEERING

    STUDENTS, LIFE AND WORKS OF GEORGE W. WHISTLER,

    CIVIL ENGINEER," ETC.


    ETERNAL VIGILANCE IS THE PRICE OF LIBERTY


    BOSTON

    LEE AND SHEPARD PUBLISHERS

    10 MILK STREET

    Next Old South Meeting House

    1887


    Footnote

    Table of Contents

    The substance of the following pages appeared originally in The Railroad Gazette. It was afterwards reproduced in pamphlet form, and has since been several times delivered as an address to various bodies, the last occasion being before the Legislature of Massachusetts, 1887. It is now re-published, with some new matter added, in the hope that the public attention may be called to a subject which has so important a bearing upon the public safety.

    Copyright, 1887,

    By

    LEE AND SHEPARD.


    All rights reserved.


    BRIDGE DISASTERS IN AMERICA.

    Table of Contents

    Nearly all of the disasters which occur from the breaking down of bridges are caused by defects which would be easily detected by an efficient system of inspection. Not less than forty bridges fall in the United States every year. No system of public inspection or control at present existing has been able to detect in advance the defects in these structures, or to prevent the disasters. After a defective bridge falls, it is in nearly every case easy to see why it did so. It would be just about as easy, in most cases, to tell in advance that such a structure would fall if it ever happened to be heavily loaded. Hundreds of bridges are to-day standing in this country simply because they never happen to have received the load which is at any time liable to come upon them.

    A few years ago an iron highway bridge at Dixon, Ill., fell, while a crowd was upon it, and killed sixty persons. The briefest inspection of that bridge by any competent engineer would have been sure to condemn it. A few years later the Ashtabula bridge upon the Lake Shore Railroad broke down under an express train, and killed over eighty passengers. The report of the committee of the Ohio Legislature appointed to investigate that disaster concluded, first, that the bridge went down under an ordinary load by reason of defects in its original construction; and, secondly, that the defects in the original construction of the bridge could have been discovered at any time after its erection by careful examination. Hardly had the public recovered from the shock of this terrible disaster when the Tariffville calamity added its list of dead and wounded to the long roll already charged to the ignorance and recklessness which characterize so much of the management of the public works in this country.

    There are many bridges now in use upon our railroads in no way better than those at Ashtabula and Tariffville, and which await only the right combination of circumstances to tumble down. There are, by the laws of chance, just so many persons who are going to be killed on those bridges. There are hundreds of highway bridges now in daily use which are in no way safer than the bridge at Dixon was, and which would certainly be condemned by five minutes of competent and honest inspection. More than that, many of them have already been condemned as unfit for public use, but yet are allowed to remain, and invite the disaster which is sure to come. Can nothing be done to prevent this reckless and wicked waste of human life? Can we not have some system of public control of public works which shall secure the public safety? The answer to this question will be, Not until the public is a good deal more enlightened upon these matters than it is now.

    It has been very correctly remarked, that, in order to bring a disaster

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